Is f(x)=(x^2-9)/(x-3) continuous at x=3?

nabakhi72

nabakhi72

Answered question

2022-08-09

Is f ( x ) = x 2 - 9 x - 3 continuous at x=3?

Answer & Explanation

alienceenvedsf0

alienceenvedsf0

Beginner2022-08-10Added 15 answers

f ( x ) = x 2 - 9 x - 3 is not continuous at x=3.
In order for a function f(x) to be continuous at a given x-value a, the following condition must be satisfied:
[ 1 ] lim x a f ( x ) = f ( a )
What this is saying is that, as x gets closer to a, f(x) should also get closer to f(a).
For the given function f(x), the limit on the left-hand side of [1] will evaluate correctly. You'll end up with lim x 3 x 2 - 9 x - 3 = 6 . However, the right-hand side of [1] presents a problem: what is f(x) when x=3? The answer is, it is not defined, because at that point, we have f(x) "equal" to 0/0:
f ( 3 ) = 3 2 - 9 3 - 3 = 9 - 9 0 = 0 0
And this "value" of 0/0 is indeterminate.
Thus, the function "breaks" at x=3, and so, because there is no f(3), it is not possible to say lim x 3 f ( x ) = f ( 3 ) . . Thus, f(x) is not continuous at x=3.
Pader6u

Pader6u

Beginner2022-08-11Added 4 answers

Here's a tip to determine where some functions will be discontinuous. Any x-value that makes any denominator in the function equal to 0 is a point of discontinuity. So for the function above, x−3=0 when x=3, and so the function will be discontinuous at x=3.
The only exception to this is if the function is piecewise defined at potential "breaking" points, like this:
f ( x ) = { x 2 - 9 x - 3 , x 3 6 , x = 3
In this case, since f*(x) is defined at x=3, we have lim x 3 f ( x ) = f ( 3 ) , so f*(x) is continuous at x=3 (and everywhere).

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